For college graduates interested in an in-depth introduction to the field while designing and facilitating interpretive programs for diverse audiences. Join a dynamic group of other emerging arts ...
The Feminist Art Base is a digital archive dedicated solely to feminist art, offering profiles of some of the most prominent and promising contributors to the field. This digital resource was created ...
My professor wants to send their letter of recommendation confidentially. To whom should they address their letter? Letters of recommendation should be submitted with the rest of your application.
Plan a guided tour of our renowned collection or special exhibitions, or take a thematic journey through our galleries. Led by our educators, these hour-long sessions are specifically designed to meet ...
The Dinner Party rests upon the Heritage Floor, which is an equilateral triangle forty-eight feet on each side. This monumental floor is comprised of 2,300 hand-cast porcelain tiles and provides both ...
Artemisia Gentileschi was an early Italian Baroque painter, and the only female follower of Caravaggio, whom she worked with in Italy in the early 17th century. Her innovative compositions and focus ...
Brooklyn Snapshots is a column that uncovers stories within the Brooklyn Museum’s Photography collection. Find more by exploring the collection online. Growing up in New York City provides an ...
December 11, 1941 Today the Brooklyn Museum opens the first exhibition of photographs from the Daniel Berry Austin Collection. This exhibition, entitled, “Brooklyn in the Early 1900’s”, is installed ...
Ms. Lonely Arts is an advice column offering recommendations to the Brooklyn Museum’s fans, followers, and friends. The Brooklyn Museum is so many things to so many people. It can offer sanctuary from ...
December 5, 1940 Selections from acquisitions of the Brooklyn Museum from May through October will be exhibited to the public in a showing which opens December 5 and extends through January 12.
The new section of American rooms at the Brooklyn Museum consists of nineteen rooms arranged in four groups. The first, in four parts, illustrates styles prevalent in the south in the 18th Century.